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Data Sources

Everything on this site is pulled from publicly available scientific databases and open APIs. No data is made up. Where we interpret or speculate, we say so clearly. You can follow every link below and check for yourself — which is how any of this is supposed to work.

Earth & Space Data

Earthquakes

USGS Earthquake Hazards Program. Real-time global seismic data.

earthquake.usgs.gov → (opens in new tab)

Solar Activity & Geomagnetic Index

NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center. Solar flares, Kp index, sunspot numbers.

swpc.noaa.gov → (opens in new tab)

Near-Earth Objects

NASA Center for Near Earth Object Studies. Asteroid close approaches.

cneos.jpl.nasa.gov → (opens in new tab)

Magnetic Field & Pole Drift

NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. World Magnetic Model (WMM).

ncei.noaa.gov → (opens in new tab)

Schumann Resonance

HeartMath Institute Global Coherence Monitoring System. 7.83 Hz fundamental frequency.

heartmath.org → (opens in new tab)

Cosmic Rays

Neutron Monitor Database (NMDB). Global cosmic ray monitoring network.

nmdb.eu → (opens in new tab)

Economic Data

Cryptocurrency Prices

CoinGecko API. Real-time Bitcoin and crypto market data.

coingecko.com → (opens in new tab)

Fear & Greed Index

Alternative.me. Crypto market sentiment indicator (0-100).

alternative.me → (opens in new tab)

Federal Reserve Economic Data

FRED (St. Louis Fed). Interest rates, inflation, GDP, employment.

fred.stlouisfed.org → (opens in new tab)

World Bank Data

World Bank Open Data. Global development indicators.

data.worldbank.org → (opens in new tab)

World & Conflict Data

Global Event Monitoring

GDELT Project. Monitors global news and events across 100+ languages in real time.

gdeltproject.org → (opens in new tab)

Armed Conflict Data

Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP). Academic database of organized violence worldwide.

ucdp.uu.se → (opens in new tab)

Political Violence Events

ACLED (Armed Conflict Location & Event Data) via HDX. Verified political violence events and fatalities worldwide, updated weekly.

acleddata.com → (opens in new tab)

Humanitarian Data Exchange

HDX by UN OCHA. Open platform aggregating humanitarian datasets, including weekly ACLED mirrors.

data.humdata.org → (opens in new tab)

Cosmic Cycles & Calendars

Planetary Positions & Eclipses

Swiss Ephemeris (pyswisseph). High-precision astronomical calculations used by NASA and ESA.

astro.com/swisseph → (opens in new tab)

Eclipse Data

NASA Eclipse Website. Comprehensive solar and lunar eclipse predictions.

eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov → (opens in new tab)

Precession of the Equinoxes

IAU standard: 25,772 years (modern measurement). Traditional value: 25,920 years (Platonic Year).

Calculated locally

Yuga Cycle (Sri Yukteswar Model)

Based on Sri Yukteswar's "The Holy Science" (1894). 24,000-year ascending/descending consciousness cycle.

sacred-texts.com → (opens in new tab)

Maya Long Count

GMT correlation (Goodman-Martinez-Thompson). 13 Baktuns = 5,125.36 years per Great Cycle.

Calculated locally

AI & Career Data

AI Job Displacement Research

Based on Frey & Osborne (2017) automation probabilities, updated with current AI capability assessments.

Oxford Martin → (opens in new tab)

Occupation Data

O*NET (Occupational Information Network). US Department of Labor's detailed job task database.

onetonline.org → (opens in new tab)

Ancient Texts & Archaeology

Ancient Text Library

Sacred Texts Archive. Public domain translations of religious and philosophical texts from all civilizations.

sacred-texts.com → (opens in new tab)

Plato's Dialogues

Project Gutenberg. Free public domain translations including Timaeus and Critias.

gutenberg.org → (opens in new tab)

A note on interpretation

The raw data on this site comes from established scientific institutions. Our interpretation of that data — particularly regarding ancient calendar alignments, the age of megalithic structures, and the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis — reflects an alternative archaeological perspective that is not accepted by mainstream academia.

We believe the evidence supports these interpretations. We also believe you should look at the data yourself and draw your own conclusions. That's why every source is linked above.